Favourite chess book?

Favourite chess book?

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MR

Joined
19 Jun 06
Moves
847
17 Nov 07

Originally posted by tomtom232
Okay, that is why I said "I believe" what I said to be true. Thanx for the correction.
It wasn't really a correction, I was just relaying Silman's opinion on the best reading order. What does Silman know, anyway? 😉

t

Joined
15 Jun 06
Moves
16334
17 Nov 07
1 edit

Originally posted by Mad Rook
It wasn't really a correction, I was just relaying Silman's opinion on the best reading order. What does Silman know, anyway? 😉
Silman huh

what does Silman know

Absolutely Nothing! 😀

SS

Joined
15 Aug 05
Moves
96595
17 Nov 07

MR

Joined
19 Jun 06
Moves
847
17 Nov 07

The post that was quoted here has been removed
I've noticed a lot of books starting with "The Art of..." tend to get high marks from chess people (e.g., The Art of Attack, The Art of the Checkmate, etc.). I'm surprised that more chess book authors don't use titles along that line. (The Art of [fill in the blank]). 😀

jrc

Joined
05 Nov 07
Moves
1096
18 Nov 07

I like my Chess Fundamentals

MR

Joined
19 Jun 06
Moves
847
18 Nov 07

Originally posted by jose r capablanca
I like my Chess Fundamentals
When are you going to write a new edition?

Waiting patiently regards,
Mad Rook

jrc

Joined
05 Nov 07
Moves
1096
18 Nov 07

Originally posted by Mad Rook
When are you going to write a new edition?

Waiting patiently regards,
Mad Rook
When Alekhine accept a rematch 😉

W
Angler

River City

Joined
08 Dec 04
Moves
16907
19 Nov 07

Originally posted by Mad Rook
When are you going to write a new edition?

Waiting patiently regards,
Mad Rook
Nick de Firmian did so a few years ago. It got at least one mediocre review:

http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/capablanca.html

MR

Joined
19 Jun 06
Moves
847
19 Nov 07

Originally posted by Wulebgr
Nick de Firmian did so a few years ago. It got at least one mediocre review:

http://www.chesshistory.com/winter/extra/capablanca.html
Yeah, Winter's article is why I got the Cadogan edition instead of the McKay (Defirmian) edition. I don't worry as much about minor typos as Winter does, but sometimes he tips us off to major deficiencies.

TD8

Joined
26 Jan 07
Moves
2915
19 Nov 07

I have an addition of the Art of War which is edited by James Clavell. It is short and to the point. I like chess books that explain moves in more abstract terms rather than listing off long lines of play, and when I'm tired of reading chess books I find this 80-90 page inspires my play on the board.

When I see a move in a game or from a book I can relate it to a passage from this book, and to some extent I guess it works the other way too.

W
Angler

River City

Joined
08 Dec 04
Moves
16907
19 Nov 07

Originally posted by Mad Rook
Yeah, Winter's article is why I got the Cadogan edition instead of the McKay (Defirmian) edition. I don't worry as much about minor typos as Winter does, but sometimes he tips us off to major deficiencies.
Minor typos can be bad when there are several on every page, as in Breaking Through: How the Polgar Sisters Changed the Game of Chess by Susan Polgar with Paul Truong.

B

Here and there

Joined
01 Nov 07
Moves
403
19 Nov 07

I think that the book that single-handed improved my results is "The Seven Deadly Chess Sins" by Jonathan Rowson. Not only is it HUGELY entertaining book about chess psychology, but I would say that it's one of those very rare books that you can read through without a chessboard and learn a lot from just by reading the texts (and let's face it, don't we all usually skip through our chessbooks!!). It deals with the mistakes that we (as players) bring to the chessboard, giving different ways of thinking about things and and how to improve the chess-playing person rather than only talk about chess moves. Sheer pleasure...! (The seven deadly sins are things like Egoism, Wanting, Perfectionism, Blinking, Materialism etc etc... (it's especially attractive if you also happen to be interested in (in no particular order ;-)...taoism, quantum physics, paradox...).

B

Here and there

Joined
01 Nov 07
Moves
403
02 Dec 07

Now that I've thought about it a little, I'd have to put Bronstein's book about the Zurich tournament as one of my favorites, along with Tal's book on his world championship match with Botvinnik in 1960..

j

Joined
12 May 07
Moves
8718
02 Dec 07

judgement and planning in chess - Euwe.

S

Joined
14 Jul 06
Moves
20541
02 Dec 07

I recently bought Paul Morphy: A Modern Perspective by V. Beim.

I'm very impressed with both the thoroughness of the notations & also the way that Beim has isolated key features of Morphy's play & how these changed & developed over his brief career.